Appendix II
In the Western world visionaries and mystics are a good deal less
common than they used to be. There
are two principal reasons for this state of affairs - a philosophical reason
and a chemical reason. In the currently
fashionable picture of the universe there is no place for valid transcendental
experience. Consequently those who have
had what they regard as valid transcendental experiences are looked upon with
suspicion, as being either lunatics or swindlers. To be a mystic or a visionary is no longer
creditable.
But it is not only our
mental climate that is unfavourable to the visionary and the mystic; it is also
our chemical environment - an environment profoundly different from that in
which our forefathers passed their lives.
The brain is chemically
controlled, and experience has shown that it can be made permeable to the
(biologically speaking) superfluous aspects of Mind-at-Large by modifying the
(biologically speaking) normal chemistry of the body.
For almost half of
every year our ancestors ate no fruit, no green vegetables, and (since it was
impossible for them to feed more than a few oxen, cows, swine, and poultry
during the winter months) very little butter or fresh meat, and very few eggs. By the beginning of each successive spring,
most of them were suffering, mildly or acutely, from scurvy, due to lack of
vitamin C, and pellagra, caused by a shortage in their diet of the B
complex. The distressing physical
symptoms of these diseases are associated with no-less distressing
psychological symptoms. [See THE BIOLOGY OF HUMAN
STARVATION, by A. Keys (University of Minnesota Press, 1950); also the recent
(1955) reports of the work on the role of vitamin deficiencies in mental
disease carried out by Dr George Watson and his associates in Southern
California.]
The nervous system is more vulnerable than the other tissues of
the body; consequently vitamin deficiencies tend to affect the state of mind
before they affect, at least in any very obvious way, the skin, bones, mucous
membranes, muscles, and viscera. The
first result of an inadequate diet is a lowering of the efficiency of the brain
as an instrument for biological survival.
The undernourished person tends to be afflicted by anxiety, depression,
hypochondria, and feelings of anxiety.
He is also liable to see visions; for when the cerebral reducing valve
has its efficiency reduced, much (biologically speaking) useless material flows
into consciousness from 'out there', in Mind-at-Large.
Much of what the
earlier visionaries experienced was terrifying.
To use the language of Christian theology, the Devil revealed himself in
their visions and ecstasies a good deal more frequently than did God. In an age when vitamins were deficient and a
belief in Satan universal, this was not surprising. The mental distress, associated with even
mild cases of pellagra and scurvy, was deepened by fears of damnation and a
conviction that the powers of evil were omnipresent. This distress was apt to tinge with its own
dark colouring the visionary material, admitted to consciousness through a
cerebral valve whose efficiency had been impaired by underfeeding. But in spite of their preoccupations with
eternal punishment and in spite of their deficiency disease, spiritually minded
ascetics often saw heaven and might even be aware, occasionally, of that
divinely impartial One, in which the polar opposites are reconciled. For a glimpse of beatitude, for a foretaste
of unitive knowledge, no price seemed too high. Mortification of the body may produce a host
of undesirable mental symptoms; but it may also open a door into a
transcendental world of Being, Knowledge, and Bliss. That is why, in spite of its obvious
disadvantages, almost all aspirants to the spiritual life have, in the past,
undertaken regular courses of bodily mortification.
So far as vitamins were
concerned, every medieval winter was a long involuntary fast, and this
involuntary fast was followed, during Lent, by forty days of voluntary
abstinence. Holy Week found the faithful
marvellously well prepared, so far as their body chemistry was concerned, for
its tremendous incitements to grief and joy, for seasonable remorse of
conscience and a self-transcending identification with the risen Christ. At this season of the highest religious
excitement and the lowest vitamin intake, ecstasies and visions were almost a
commonplace. It was only to be expected.
For cloistered
contemplatives, there were several Lents in every year. And even between fasts their diet was meagre
in the extreme. Hence those agonies of
depression and scrupulosity described by so many spiritual writers; hence their
frightful temptations to despair and self-slaughter. But hence too those
'gratuitous graces', in the forms of heavenly visions and locutions, of
prophetic insights, of telepathic 'discernments of spirits'. And hence, finally, their
'infused contemplation', their 'obscure knowledge' of the One in all.
Fasting was not the
only form of physical mortification resorted to by the earlier aspirants to
spirituality. Most of them regularly
used upon themselves the whip of knotted leather or even of iron wire. These beatings were the equivalent of fairly
extensive surgery without anaesthetics, and their effects on the body chemistry
of the patient were considerable. Large
quantities of histamine and adrenalin were released while the whip was actually
being plied; and when the resulting wounds began to fester (as wounds
practically always did before the age of soap), various toxic substances,
produced by the decomposition of protein, found their way into the
bloodstream. But histamine produces
shock, and shock affects the mind no less profoundly than the body. Moreover, large quantities of adrenalin may
cause hallucinations, and some of the products of its decomposition are known
to induce symptoms resembling those of schizophrenia. As for toxins from wounds - these upset the
enzyme systems regulating the brain, and lower its efficiency as an instrument
for getting on in a world where the biologically fittest survive. This may explain why the Curé
d'Arts used to say that, in the days when he was free
to flagellate himself without mercy, God would refuse him nothing. In other words, when remorse, self-loathing,
and the fear of hell release adrenalin, when self-inflicted surgery releases
adrenalin and histamine, and when infected wounds release decomposed protein
into the blood, the efficiency of the cerebral reducing valve is lowered and
unfamiliar aspects of Mind-at-Large (including psi
phenomena, visions, and, if he is philosophically and ethically prepared for
it, mystical experiences) will flow into the ascetic's consciousness.
Lent, as we have seen,
followed a long period of involuntary fasting.
Analogously, the effects of self-flagellation were supplemented, in
earlier times, by much involuntary absorption of decomposed protein. Dentistry was non-existent, surgeons were
executioners, and there were no safe antiseptics. Most people, therefore, must have lived out
their lives with focal infections; and focal infections, though out of fashion
as the cause of all the ills that flesh is heir to, can certainly lower
the efficiency of the cerebral reducing valve.
And the moral of all
this is - what? Exponents of a
Nothing-But philosophy will answer that, since changes in body chemistry can
create the conditions favourable to visionary and mystical experience,
visionary and mystical experience cannot be what they claim to be - what, for
those who have had them, they self-evidently are. But this, of course, is a non sequitur.
A similar conclusion
will be reached by those whose philosophy is unduly 'spiritual'. God, they will insist, is a spirit and is to
be worshipped in spirit. Therefore an
experience which is chemically conditioned cannot be an experience of the
divine. But, in one way or another, all
our experiences are chemically conditioned, and if we imagine that some of
them are purely 'spiritual', purely 'intellectual', purely 'aesthetic', it is
merely because we have never troubled to investigate the internal chemical
environment at the moment of their occurrence.
Furthermore, it is a matter of historical record that most
contemplatives worked systematically to modify their body chemistry, with a
view to creating the internal conditions favourable to spiritual insight. When they were not starving themselves into
low blood sugar and vitamin deficiency, or beating themselves into intoxication
by histamine, adrenalin, and decomposed protein, they were cultivating insomnia
and praying for long periods in uncomfortable positions, in order to create the
psycho-physical symptoms of stress. In
the intervals they sang interminable psalms, thus increasing the amount of
carbon dioxide in the lungs and the bloodstream, or, if they were Orientals,
they did breathing exercises to accomplish the same purpose. Today we know how to lower the efficiency of
the cerebral reducing valve by direct chemical action, and without the risk of
inflicting serious damage on the psycho-physical organism. For an aspiring mystic to revert, in the
present state of knowledge, to prolonged fasting and violent self-flagellation
would be as senseless as it would be for an aspiring cook to behave like
Charles Lamb's Chinaman, who burned down the house in order to roast a
pig. Knowing as he does (or at least as
he can know, if he so desires) what are the chemical conditions of
transcendental experience, the aspiring mystic should turn for technical help
to the specialists - in pharmacology, in biochemistry, in physiology and
neurology, in psychology and psychiatry and parapsychology. And on their part, of course, the specialists
(if any of them aspire to be genuine men of science and complete human beings)
should turn, out of their respective pigeonholes, to the artist, the sibyl, the
visionary, the mystic - all those, in a word, who have had experience of the
Other World and who know, in their different ways, what to do with that
experience.